Economía

Public Opinions on Removing Disincentives and Introducing Incentives for Organ Donation

Proposing a European Research Agenda
Autor
Julio J. Elias; Frederike Ambagtsheer; Eline Bunnik; Liset H. M. Pengel; Marlies EJ Reinders; Nicola Lacetera; Mario Macis
Mes/Año
abr-24
Publicado en
Transplant International
ISSN / ISBN
1432-2277

The shortage of organs for transplantations is increasing in Europe as well as globally. Many initiatives to the organ shortage, such as opt-out systems for deceased donation and expanding living donation, have been insufficient to meet the rising demand for organs. In recurrent discussions on how to reduce organ shortage, financial incentives
and removal of disincentives, have been proposed to stimulate living organ donation and increase the pool of available donor organs. It is important to understand not only the ethical acceptability of (dis)incentives for organ donation, but also its societal acceptance. In this review, we propose a research agenda to help guide future empirical studies on public preferences in Europe towards the removal of disincentives and introduction of incentives for organ donation. We first present a systematic literature review on public opinions concerning (financial) (dis)incentives for organ donation in European countries. Next, we describe the results of a randomized survey experiment conducted in the United States. This experiment is crucial because it suggests that societal support for incentivizing organ donation depends on the specific features and institutional design of the proposed incentive scheme. We conclude by proposing this experiment’s framework as a blueprint for European research on this topic.

Acceder al documento: https://www.frontierspartnerships.org/articles/10.3389/ti.2024.12483/full